On Friday, February 12, 2016 12:07:27 PM CET Alexander Dymo wrote: > On Fri, Feb 12, 2016 at 1:04 AM, Martin Graesslin <mgraess...@kde.org> wrote: > > Why should there be a line? > > I've been managing software development organizations since 2008. I > attest to the importance of drawing a line. There's so much you can do > with software. Unless you learn to say "no", you will not make a good > product. > > By the way, I learned this the hard way in open source world too. Let > me tell you a story. > > When I was a KDevelop maintainer during 3.x cycle, I welcomed every > single KDevelop plugin into the core. > > End result? We did not attract new developers this way, but instead > were forced to maintain a huge collection of barely useful software > with a small team. > > During 4.x development we clearly defined the core of KDevelop. It was > to be a great C++ IDE. Any plugin that did not fit into the core was > separated into its own repository. What remained received as much > attention as possible. > > End result? A much better product. New contributors. And guess what? > Some of the plugins that were separated not only survived, but saw > more development and usage.
I interpret your answer as "KWin should not go into the cloud". Thank you for your answer. Martin
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